I'm still bouncing back from this weekend's trip to Durham, North Carolina for the National Day of Truthtelling. A dozen of us traveled all the way from New York City to join this incredibly necessary mobilization to continue breaking the silence on sexual violence. It was one of those deeply touching, exhausting journeys.

Our NYC crew was a beautiful bunch if I may say so myself, and we complemented each other quite a bit as well (except while driving...we turned what should've been a 9 hour drive into a 14 hour odyssey!). Once we got there the rest was...warm evening gathering, bombastic sound system leading the march, heartbreakingly wonderful poem, train tracks dividing white from black, young dancers tearing it up, workshops "For Colored Girls Who..." and Men Against Rape Culture (MARC), challenging discussions building relationships between MARC and the Generation Five (G5) Men's Collaborative, group dinner, after party:jim crow jackson experiment/mosadi music/a little dancing in the streets, more MARC/G5 convo building towards the US Social Forum, group brunch, and the ride home...plus an nyc caravanista this morning on WBAI's Wakeup Call.

There's already been some great stuff written about the Day...so I'm gonna add this little piece below to the discussion. It's something my Mom passed on to me. Much thanks to Kai, Shirlette and Bryan for bringing the southern hospitality...big ups to Ubuntu!, Men Against Rape Culture, and all the groups who pulled the Day together. Also, with respect to the story below, props to BrownFemiPower and all the compañeras holdin' it down on-line in spite of the haters.

One last thing...finally found it on-line, wanna share this poem with EVERYONE: wishful thinking by Alexis Pauline Gumbs.

"Everyone receives abuse online but the sheer hatred thrown at womenbloggers has left some in fear for their lives."Last week, Kathy Sierra, a well-known software programmer and Javaexpert, announced that she had cancelled her speaking engagements andwas "afraid to leave my yard" after being threatened with suffocation,rape and hanging. The threats didn't come from a stalker or a jiltedlover and they weren't responses to a controversial book or speech.Sierra's harassers were largely anonymous, and all the threats had beenmade online.

Sierra had been receiving increasingly abusive comments on her website,Creating Passionate Users, over the previous year, but had not expectedthem to turn so violent - her attackers not only verbally assaulting her("fuck off you boring slut . . . I hope someone slits your throat") butalso posting photomontages of her on other sites: one with a noose nextto her head and another depicting her screaming with a thong coveringher face. Since she wrote about the abuse on her website, the harassment has increased. "People are posting all my private data online everywhere - social-security number, and home address - retaliation for speaking out."

While no one could deny that men experience abuse online, the sheervitriol directed at women has become impossible to ignore. Extremeinstances of stalking, death threats and hate speech are now prevalent,as well as all the everyday harassment that women have traditionallyfaced in the outside world - cat-calls, for instance, or being "rated"on our looks. It's all very far from the utopian ideals that greeted thedawn of the web - the idea of it as a new, egalitarian public space,where men and women from all races, and of all sexualities, could mixwithout prejudice.

On some online forums anonymity combined with misogyny can make for an almost gang-rape like mentality. One recent blog thread, attacking twowomen bloggers, contained comments like, "I would fuck them both in theass,"; "Without us you would be raped, beaten and killed for nothing,";and "Don't worry, you or your friends are too ugly to be put on theblack market."

Jill Filipovic, a 23-year-old law student who also writes on the popularblog, Feministe, recently had some photographs of her uploaded andsubjected to abusive comments on an online forum for students in NewYork. "The people who were posting comments about me were speculating as to how many abortions I've had, and they talked about 'hate-fucking' me," says Filipovic. "I don't think a man would get that; the harassment of women is far more sexualized - men may be told that they're idiots, but they aren't called 'whores'."

Most disturbing is how accepted this is. When women are harassed on thestreet, it is considered inappropriate. Online, though, sexualharassment is not only tolerated - it's often lauded. Blog threads orforums where women are attacked attract hundreds of comments, and their traffic rates rocket.

Is this what people are really like? Sexist and violent? Misogynist andracist? Alice Marwick, a postgraduate student in New York studyingculture and communication, says: "There's the disturbing possibilitythat people are creating online environments purely to express the typeof racist, homophobic, or sexist speech that is no longer acceptable inpublic society, at work, or even at home."

Last year I had my own run-in with online sexism when I was invited to alunch meeting with Bill Clinton, along with a handful of other bloggers.After the meeting, a group photo of the attendees with Clinton wasposted on several websites, and it wasn't long before comments about myappearance ("Who's the intern?; "I do like Gray Shirt's three-quarterpose.") started popping up.

One website, run by law professor and occasional New York Timescolumnist Ann Althouse, devoted an entire article to how I was "posing"so as to "make [my] breasts as obvious as possible". The post, titled"Let's take a closer look at those breasts," ended up with over 500comments. Most were about my body, my perceived whorishness, and how I couldn't possibly be a good feminist because I had the gall to show upto a meeting with my breasts in tow. One commenter even created alimerick about me giving oral sex. Althouse herself said that I shouldhave "worn a beret . . . a blue dress would have been good too". Allthis on the basis of a photograph of me in a crew-neck sweater from Gap.

I won't even get into the hundreds of other blogs and websites thatlinked to the "controversy." It was, without doubt, the most humiliatingexperience of my life - all because I dared be photographed with apolitical figure.

But a picture does seem to be considered enough reason to go on aharassment rampage. Some argue that the increased visibility affordedpeople by the internet - who doesn't have a blog, MySpace page, orFlickr account these days? - means that harassment should be expected,even acceptable. When feminist and liberal bloggers slammed Althouse for her attack on me, she argued that having been in a photo where I was"posing" made me fair game. When Filipovic complained about herharassment, the site responded: "For a woman who has made 4,000 pictures of herself publicly available on Flickr, and who is a self-proclaimed feminist author of a widely-disseminated blog, she has gotten pretty shy about overexposure."

Ah, the "she was asking for it" defence."I think there's a tendency toput the blame on the victims of stalking, harassment or even sexualviolence when the victim is a woman - and especially when she's a womanwho has made herself public," says Filipovic. "Public space hastraditionally been reserved for men, and women are supposed to bequiet."

Sierra thinks that online threats, even if they are coming from a smallgroup of people, have tremendous potential to scare women from fullyparticipating online. "How many rape/fantasy threats does it take tomake women want to lay low? Not many," she says.

But even women who don't put their pictures or real names online aresubject to virtual harassment. A recent study showed that when thegender of an online username appears female, they are 25 times morelikely to experience harassment. The study, conducted by the Universityof Maryland, found that female user-names averaged 163 threateningand/or sexually explicit messages a day.

"The promise of the early internet," says Marwick, "was that it wouldliberate us from our bodies, and all the oppressions associated withprejudice. We'd communicate soul-to-soul, and get to know each other aspeople, rather than judging each other based on gender or race." Inreality, what ended up happening was that, online, the default identitybecame male and white - unless told otherwise, you would assume you were talking to a white man. "So people who brought up their ethnicity, or people who complained about sexism in online communications, were seen as 'playing the race/gender card' or trying to stir up trouble," says Marwick.

And while online harassment doesn't necessarily create the sameimmediate safety concerns as street harassment, the consequences arearguably more severe. If someone calls you a "slut" on the street, itstings - but you can move on. If someone calls you a "slut" online,there's a public record as long as the site exists.

Let me tell you, it's not easy to build a career as a feminist writerwhen you have people coming up to you in pubs asking if you're the"Clinton boob girl" or if one of the first items that comes up in aGoogle search of your name is "boobgate". And for young women applyingfor jobs, the reality is terrifying. Imagine a potential employersearching for information and coming across a thread about what a"whore" you are.

Thankfully, women are fighting back. Sparked by the violent harassmentof Sierra, one blogger started a "stop cyberbullying" campaign. This waspicked up by hundreds of other bloggers and an international women'stechnology organization, Take Back the Tech, a global network of womenwho encourage people to "take back online spaces" by writing, videoblogging, or podcasting about online harassment.

It won't mean the end of misogyny on the web, but it is a start. Suchcampaigns show that women are ready to demand freedom from harassment and fear in our new public spaces. In the same way that we should be able to walk down the street without fear of being raped, women shouldn't have to stay quiet online - or pretend to be men - to be free of threats and harassment. It is time to take back the sites.

In addition to publishing my own writings, in this blog's first nine months I've had the pleasure of introducing many other writers' works to the world or, as in this case, the Internet. Here is a teaser to entice you to buy the whole book, a piece from the aforementioned collection written by a compañera who I admire very much...thanks to Paula for letting us debut her piece on-line here at zapagringo.com!

Are the Cops in Our Heads and Hearts?by Paula X. Rojas

Like many other activists on the left, I have been struggling with the contradictions found in organizing work here in the United States. I have worked in community-based organizing, both within and outside. My experiences both in the United States and in Latin America have shaped my analysis of the non-profit system as well as alternatives to this system. In the US I am involved in grassroots organizing work with a multigenerational community of poor and working class women of color in Brooklyn (Sista II Sista and Pachamama). But what has most pushed my analysis has come from my work and experiences outside of the US, specifically in Latin America. As an adult I have spent a few years in Chile, my country of origin, supporting organizing efforts against the military dictatorship headed by Augusto Pinochet and the neoliberal “democracies” of the Christian Democratic Party that followed. From Chile, I had the opportunity to travel to La Paz and El Alto, Bolivia, in 1994 and meet with local activists. In Mexico, I have worked with women’s groups around political and physical self defense in rural and urban areas. I also had various opportunities to visit the Zapatistas in Chiapas, Mexico, first spending 3 weeks in the Autonomous territories in 1999. In 2003 I had a few days visiting an encampment and a settlement of the MST (Landless Rural Unemployed Workers Movement) in Brazil and attended a continental gathering of Autonomous Movements in Argentina held at an occupied factory in 2005. Through these experiences and many (mostly informal) conversations, over cheap wine and good music, with other compañer@s(1), organizers, friends and family in both Latin America and the United States, I have gathered these reflections that I want to share.Lessons from Latin America

More than once, compas from Latin America have asked me: Why are you getting a permit from the police to protest police brutality? Why are you being paid to do organizing? Why are people’s movements based in non-profit offices? Behind these kinds of questions are different assumptions about organizing that might challenge activists in the United States to think outside the non-profit system.

Contemporary Latin America is a helpful location from which we can reconceptualize and reimagine organizing strategies in the United States. The relatively recent articulation of powerful new revolutionary movements, as well as the economic connections and geographic closeness to the US makes it an important region for us to watch closely and learn from. In the past fifteen years, we have witnessed the rapid development of mass-based movements that have significantly impacted the social, political, and economic structures in Latin America. From the perspective of the Establishment Left, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Sandinista electoral loss in Nicaragua in 1989 seemed to signal the death of revolutionary struggle. But across Latin America, people’s movements were quietly but steadily building their base for years before making their work public. Gerardo Rénique notes:

Today the specter haunting capitalism journeys through Latin America. The region’s ongoing social and political upheaval threatens the hegemony of global capital and neo-liberal ideology. In an unprecedented cycle of strikes, mass mobilizations, and popular insurrections extending from the early 90’s to the present, the marginalized, exploited, and despised subaltern classes have drawn on deeply rooted traditions of struggle to bring down corrupt and authoritarian regimes closely identified with the IMF [International Monetary Fund], the World Bank and Washington(2).

Some countries, such as Brazil, Venezuela, Bolivia, and Ecuador, have produced movements aimed directly at resisting US imperialism as a result of people gaining some control over their governments. In other countries like Mexico where the government is not in resistant to the U.S. Empire, we still see large social movements that are much stronger than current movements in the United States which are able to put significant pressure on their governments.

On January 1, 1994, the day NAFTA was signed into effect, the EZLN (Zapatista National Liberation Army) began an armed uprising by indigenous peasants in Chiapas, Mexico. I have vivid memories of the rebellion and its international impact. I lived in Chile at the time and the uprising made all the mainstream news for days (newspapers, television and radio). It was major news everywhere along the continent except in the US. Within days smaller rebellions popped up in various countries. Like the MST, which had been growing in Brazil since 1978, the Zapatistas had been steadily building its base since 1983, before becoming publicly known. This was a powerful moment that re-ignited hope for movements all across the continent in the possibility of revolutionary transformation from the ground up. It was a 12-day war that succeeded in capturing five municipalities that constitute 25 percent of the state of Chiapas. This defiant action was unprecedented in modern Mexican history. In the next year, 1995, the EZLN held the Consulta Nacional por la Paz y la Democracia where 1.3 million people participated in making the decision of what the future structure and scope of the EZLN would be.

This hope grew throughout the late 1990s, and new visions guiding revolutionary struggles emerged. Though there are still a number of traditionally Marxist/Leninist based armed and/or political party national liberation struggles in Latin America, there are many other examples of revolutionary visions of transformation that are well worth listening to. Instead of a unified line, broad tendencies are developed through critiques of past struggles, organic modes of organization of the most marginalized and are inspired by movements like the EZLN. These visions embrace principles like autonomia (autonomy) and horizontalidad (horizontalism); recognize daily life and the creation of liberated communities as political work; support collective non-hierarchical decision-making; and aim above all to build a society grounded in justice and peace for all. As Raul Zibechi, a Latin American writer and researcher at the Popular Education Center of the Multiversidad Franciscana de America Latina notes:

It is revealing that Latin America has seen a whole set of revolts without leadership, without organizational memory or central apparatus. Power relations within the space of the uprising tend to be based on other forms. The mortar which binds and drives those who are in revolt does not correspond to the state-form--vertical and pyramidal--but rather is based on a set of ties that are more horizontal but also more unstable than bureaucratic systems. The best known instance of this rejection of representation is the slogan “que se vayan todos” (“they all should go”-all being the politicians) which emerges in the course of the December 19-20 [2001] events in Argentina. Both in the neighborhood assemblies and among the groups of “Piqueteros” (people blocking commercial traffic on major highways) and in the occupied factories, this general slogan has concrete expressions: “entre todos todo” (“among everyone, everything”), which is similar to the Zapatista “entre todos lo sabemos todo” (“among everyone we know everything”). Both statements (which express the daily life of the groups that coined them) are directed simultaneously at non-division of labor and of thought-action, and also at there being no leaders who exist separate from the groups and communities (3).

Another deep lesson we can learn from these struggles is to question the analysis of power–the difference between taking power and creating power. According to Rodrigo Ruiz, editor of the New Left magazine Surda of Santiago, Chile:

The questioning of the traditional forms of political organization is mixed with the questioning of whether those organizations are necessary. Certainly, what weighs heavily is the combination of popular defeats, in addition to many of the left parties being justly discredited. The new movements, the experiences of resistance to neo-liberal globalization, like Seattle, Quebec, Genoa, movements like the MST,… the Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela or the Zapatista process in Chiapas has meant a significant shake-up of the old knowledge of parties that were unable to resolve with efficacy the construction of forces (4).

Historically, both political and revolutionary struggles focus on toppling state power and replacing it with peoples’ power. One problem with this model is that most of these movements re-created oppressive governance structures modeled on the same system they were trying to replace. In addition, this model rested on the notion that power lies mostly in institutions instead of recognizing and building from the power that people already have. According to Pablo Gonzalez Casanova, for the Zapatistas,

the project will have succeeded when the struggles for autonomy have evolved into networks of autonomous peoples. Its objective is to create- with, by, and for the communities- organizations of resistance that are at once connected, coordinated and self-governing, which enable them to improve their capacity to make a different world possible. At the same time, , as far as possible, the communities and the peoples should immediately put into practice the alternative life that they seek, in order to gain experience. They should not wait until they have more power to do this. It is not built on the logic of “state power” which entrapped previous revolutionary or reformist groups (5).

Implicit in these models is what could be described as a spiritual framework for understanding power that recognizes and respects the humanity of all peoples. In these newer movements, such as the Zapatistas in Chiapas, or the MTD (Unemployed Workers Movement) in Argentina, though each is very different from the other, the emphasis is on the people’s struggle for autonomy, not gathering power to topple the state and take it over. Revolution is about the process of making power and creating autonomous communities that divest from the state. And as these autonomy movements build, they can become large enough to contest state power. Raul Zibechi, for instance, suggests:

If we look closely at the more important challenges launched by the popular sectors, we will see that they all emerged from the “new” territories, which are more autonomous and independently controlled than those that existed in previous periods of capitalism: El Alto, in Bolivia; the neighborhoods and settlements of the unemployed in Argentina; the camps and settlements of the landless in Brazil; the popular neighborhoods in Caracas, and the indigenous regions in Chiapas, Bolivia and Ecuador (6).

These movements emphasize not just winning a specific political goal, but creating new communities that model the vision for liberation. While direct confrontations with state power are ongoing and necessary, these are actually just one small part of the struggle. As Zibechi observes: “To understand this involves reversing one’s perspective: rejecting the negative and state-centered viewpoint--which defines people by what they lack (needy, excluded, marginalized)--and adopting another way of looking which starts with the differences that they have created in order then to visualize other possible paths (7).”

For example, when US activists think about the Zapatista movement, the first image that frequently comes to mind is the popular left postcard of Zapatista indigenous women fighting with the Mexican military. One of the women is choking a soldier. However, this kind of confrontation, though important, is really a small part of the work being done to build this movement. For over 20 years, the Zapatistas have been organizing almost 100,000 people to create their own separate communities, their own justice system, their own healthcare system, their own agriculture, and their own educational systems. The day-to-day groundwork of these projects is not the sexy thing that gets the attention of the public like the dramatic confrontation of an unarmed woman with soldiers. But the Zapatistas’ global contributions run far deeper. Casanova addresses this directly:

Among the rich contributions of the Zapatista movement toward building an alternative is the recent project of the “caracoles” (conches). The project of the “caracoles,” according to Comandante Javier, “opens up new possibilities of resistance and autonomy for the indigenous people of Mexico and the world--a resistance which includes all those social sectors that struggle for democracy, for liberty and justice for all.” Inviting us to approach community-building and the struggle for autonomy with the patience and tranquility of the conch, “caracoles” is based in the idea of creating organizations to be used as tools to achieve certain objectives and values, and to ensure that autonomy and the motto “mandar obedeciendo” (“lead by obeying”) do not remain in the sphere of abstract concepts and incoherent words (8).

This framework is an alternative model for confronting the state and for social transformation. When the Zapatista autonomous communities open their own schools and do not participate in state schools, it challenges state power because there is one less thing that the people need from the state. And the existence of a movement living its vision has deepened the conscience of the people of Mexico as a whole and has inspired many other social movements. All of these are in direct solidarity with the EZLN, like the radical student movements, squatters’ movements, teacher’s movements, other peasant movements, and more, forming the front-lines of what is now a very advanced mass struggle.

A powerful example of autonomous aovements that may speak more directly to current U.S. conditions is that of Argentina. Argentina had long been viewed as a Latin American model of economic growth and development under neo-liberalism. But, apparently, this was not the case for the majority of Argentines. Peter Ranis writes,

The rebellion in Argentina [in] December 2001 was a spontaneous outpouring of wrath and a demonstration against the imposition and consequences of a prescribed neoliberal economic model. But it also included a direct confrontation with the governing institutions and political leadership. Argentines massively demonstrated in December 2001, beating on pots and pans, directing their opposition to President De La Rúa’s establishment of controls over savings and checking accounts (corralito). The economic turmoil precipitated the sacking of supermarkets by impoverished consumers, which in turn resulted in a declaration of a state of siege, counter-demonstrations, and the death of 27 people. De La Rúa resigned, and after a series of interim presidents, the congress designated the Peronist Eduardo Duhalde as president. The “cacerolazos” (pots and pans demonstrations) that began in December 2001 represented the mass of Argentine society from all walks of life. Argentina had never experienced such a spontaneous multiclass uprising (9).

Even before these mass uprisings, since 1996, groups of unemployed people were beginning to organize as MTD’s (Unemployed Workers Movements), since 1996, as autonomous movements (autonomous from political parties and non-profit/NGO’s and foundation funding) throughout the country, mostly concentrated in the marginalized neighborhoods surrounding the capital of Buenos Aires. Tactics varied and included takeovers of abandoned factories and other businesses. These MTD’s were also autonomous from each other, each had their own name, own political principles and practices, and their own interpretation of “Autonomia”. After 2001, many began to network and attempt to coordinate their power while still attempting to maintain horizontalidad; the goal was not to build a centralized MTD national power. Meanwhile, the mass rebellions intensified as did the repression of the state.

Many of these movements were thinking beyond the state and even beyond an alternative version of current institutions by politicizing every aspect of daily life and alternative forms of dealing with these needs. Specifically, the personal relationships between people also became politicized, with companer@s looking for just ways to treat each other in the context of the movement work and beyond.

In Argentina, the piqueteros politicize their social differences when, rather than going back to work for a boss with a miserable wage, they opt to form collectives of autonomous producers without division of labor; when they decide to take care of their health by trying to break their dependence on medication and on allopathic medicine; or when they deal with education using their own criteria and not those of the state (10).

Though many challenges have emerged along the way, these projects have demonstrated the possibility of non-hierarchical collective production, self-management (autogestión) on a large scale, in neighborhoods or in large industries with hundreds of workers.

Challenges to the Non-Profit System

These new organizing models pose some important challenges to the non-profit system. First, they challenge the notion that hierarchy and centralization are required to do mass-based political organizing. In the current non-profit system, organizations, particularly those that have a scope extending beyond the local level, tend to be based on a hierarchical governance model of an executive director, board of directors, and on down. People often argue that collective and horizontal decision-making structures are inefficient. And to the extent that they do work, many activists insist that they work only for local organizing projects or projects that are small in scope.

However, in some recent Latin American experiences we see horizontal structures for very large groups, groups much larger than any current movements in the United States. Generally these movements hold asambleas populares (popular assemblies) to determine political agendas through consensus. They are used by the Zapatistas, the MTD in Argentina, and many others engaged in struggles for autonomia. Grounded in an underlying principle of direct collective power, these practices are used to avoid power cementing in certain people placed in representative roles. People gather locally, in their community or neighborhood, on a street corner or somewhere else public and easily accessible to discuss and reflect on issues that need to be decided. What seems like a facilitator’s nightmare--a large, sometimes very large group of people without a set agenda--becomes a space to practice how we want to live collectively. They may then select rotating representatives who will meet in another popular assembly to share what is going on throughout the movement. These non-permanent representatives take these ideas back to their original popular assembly, where people then report to fellow community members and gather feedback. Popular assemblies are very inclusive--even children can participate if they are interested. Sometimes, the decision-making can be slow: this process went on for a year in order to lay the groundwork of the Chiapas uprising of January 1, 1994. During the Zapatista negotiations with the Mexican government, they took a pause of several months to consult with their thousands of members before moving forward. However, similar horizontal non-centralized processes have also been used to make almost spontaneous decisions that led to the shut down of entire countries. These processes were used to make very quick decisions to shut down Argentina in 2001 and to force out the President of Bolivia in October, 2003. In other words, horizontal decision-making can be done on a mass scale (11).

These models demonstrate that every day life is political and that everyone can participate politically. Political work is not outside your struggle for subsistence or in an organization’s office or center, but in your life. For example, some of the MTDs in Argentina set up collective kitchens, whether in joint community spaces or in the homes of MTD members. Also popular in Bolivia, this kind of shared “domestic” space became one of MTD’s most important organizing fronts:

The tendency was for the non-state orientation of domestic spaces to extend as a form of action into very broad public spaces. The rupture of the “domestic wall” brought with it, to the surprise of the protagonists themselves, the novelty that public space was occupied using the articles and practices associated with domestic space (pots and pans in Buenos Aires; rumor-mongering in El Alto). Thus in Buenos Aires neighbors came to the assemblies – in the local squares – with their domestic animals and with chairs from their houses, while in El Alto they watched over their dead in the dusty streets built by the community (12).

This contrasts strongly with the frequent habit of US non-profits to show their ownership over a issue or a particular campaign: to be considered engaged community members must go to their office for training or attend their events. But for some movements, political education does not necessarily take place in a building; instead, it is integrated into the organizing itself. For instance, Brasil’s MST centers education, including political education, in its work, arguing that one cannot build a movement among people who are not actively engaged in learning. This is in the context of a movement that is 300,000 families strong. Given the instability with which people in the landless movement live, education must take place “on the run,” in whatever conditions people are living under. So the MST developed Itinerant Education, an education system available for all children and adults based on Paolo Freire's principles of Popular Education that work toward liberation, not indoctrination.

“The Movement of Unemployed Landless Workers of Brazil (MST) that gathers homeless, tenants, rural workers, squatters, and small scale farmers is without a doubt, the most powerful social movement of Latin America” according to Marta Harnecker a Chilean political writer, analyst, journalist and researcher who has spent the last 30 years gathering and disseminating the experiences of popular struggles of Latin America from La Habana, Cuba. Nevertheless, as movement leader Joao Stedile points out, “it’s evident that both the right and the left have not been able to correctly interpret the political character of the Movement.” But the MST has no intention of becoming a political party, focused instead upon on-the-ground commitments to centering everyone’s education, the development of settlements that model the world they are trying to create, and a spiritual grounding that points to unlearning internalized social practices including an active “gender” sector and monthly rituals called místicas (mystics). The “gender” work includes safety patrols of MST members with machetes, trained in “gender” issues that intervene in domestic abuse situations and bring them to community accountability sessions. This organizing work breaks with the traditional revolutionary mold, and centers activities that most non-profits could never dream of getting away with.

The Cop in the Head-Internalized Capitalism

One of the scariest manifestations of current day Capitalism is the system’s ability to coopt experiences, practices and even culture, and to then recreate and repackage them within a careerist, profit-driven (even in “non-profits”) and competitive logic. The non-profit system, as other essays in this volume demonstrate, supports the professionalization of activism rather than a model of everyday activism. For many of us, activism has become something that you do as a career. Organizers from other countries see that activists are paid to do work in the United States and wonder. It took my father (who is very familiar with grassroots struggles) a few years to understand the work that I was doing. “Your job is a community organizer; what does that mean, it’s your employment? Who is paying you to do this work? And why?” And since many of us are being paid by foundations allied with corporate interests, My father also said, “Clearly they are paying you to keep you from really challenging the system, to make sure that you are accounted for.” As long as we are doing our social transformation work through a paid job, it is much easier to pressure, relate to and keep track of what we are doing.

When we focus on organizing as part of everyday life, the process becomes as important as the final product. In many cases, foundation funders and the non-profit culture often expect groups to achieve a campaign goal in a relatively short period of time, and are not interested in funding the much slower work of base-building that takes years and years to do. Consequently, non-profits become short-term goal oriented, even if they did not begin that way. Many also become focused on “smoke and mirrors” organizing in which you do something that looks good for a photo-op but has no real people power behind it. A critique from some organizers in Latin America on this is that, there is no one who can do “smoke and mirrors” tricks better than the mainstream corporate right wing media. They are better at manipulating information to push forward their political agenda. Why would we want to play that game? Our true power is people’s power, but that work is slow and does not necessarily catch the attention of the mainstream public and actually challenges the interests of those behind the funders.

When models focus on everyday activism, they have achieved a mass-scale that can really push for change. Here in the United States we are impressed if 100,000 people come to a March on Washington. In Chile, during the Socialist Popular Unity government you could expect to see a turnout of almost a million people (out of a population of about 10 million), on a regular basis. At the last mass demonstration a week before the military coup on September 11, 1973, the number reached a million people, ten percent of the population of the country. If we were to have the same level of participation in the United States, that would be a protest of about 28 million people! This is exactly the kind of large-scale movement building we need to create in the United States. But if the Revolution will not be funded then we have to be ready to stop jet-setting to conferences on airplanes every few months or weeks, and stop staying in hotels and fancy retreat centers with “all you can eat” buffets. We would have to be prepared to do the hard work of long 20+ hour bus rides, sleeping on the floor in communal halls and peeling 50 onions to cook one meal. Yet the non-profit system clearly hinders us from building such movements. Through the non-profit industrial complex’s institutionalization of our movements, people who are not “professionals” do not have equal access to organizing. Negotiating all these bureaucratic systems requires specialized skills that are unfamiliar to many of us. Rather than challenging state power, the non-profit model actually encourages activists to negotiate, even collaborate with the state—as those police permits for anti-police brutality marches illustrate.

I have known some widely respected organizers in Latin America who were part of land occupations and settlements involving thousands of people. Clearly activists in the United States could learn so much from these movement builders, particularly those that are now in this country. Instead, their work and efforts have been marginalized because many are not fluent in English or formally educated; nor are they “executive directors” with professionalized-organizer skills. Meanwhile NPIC has cultivated an “elite class” of non-profit managers skilled at fundraising and formally educated but often not deeply connected to the communities they are working with, even as people of color. Many of these managers/directors know a lot less about political history, analysis and movement building that some autodidacta (self-taught/organic) political organizers/intellectuals who don’t stand a chance at getting a non-profit job.

But this critique of the NPIC is just the tip of the iceberg. Our analysis must examine how we have internalized these dominant ideas of how to live and organize as the only possible way. The most radical non-profit “staff collectives” that have formal hierarchies and titles just “to deal with the outside institutions” don’t flinch at having the Executive Director make $40,000 a year and an organizer make $25,000. These are our deeper contradictions. Within Sista II Sista (SIIS) we tried to address the issues by having no titles of position and a flat salary for everyone regardless of formal education or years of experience. But we did not realize that this flat structure was not actually equitable because paying a single person with no dependents, like myself, the same as a mother made no sense at all. But even after stripping away the corporate non-profit model at SIIS, we did not realize how much we had internalized capitalism, not knowing how to address the new reality that one ex-staff person was going to work making $8/hour at a store while another was making $30/hour as a consultant. We never pushed ourselves to collectivize our income and truly break from the cop in our heads. But trying, risking and creating new ways of existing and living outside the NPIC is one possible step. Another is to keep looking to our imagination while embracing the inspirational stories of others living their future in the present.

New Relationships with Non-Profits

While it is important to be critical of the non-profit system, we do not necessarily need to get rid of it all together. Revolutionary movements around the world use non-profits (NGOs) as well, but they have a different relationship with them. In the United States, many are attempting to do organizing work through non-profits. In other places, the movement building happens outside non-profits. However, these groups will sometimes start an NGO that serves a strategic purpose (such as providing technical assistance), but the non-profit does not have power to determine the movement. Rather it is accountable to the movement.

For instance, the MST works with some NGOs that provide technical assistance for agronomy, sustainable development, and organic agriculture. The Zapatistas worked with an NGO to produce a video-documentation project that would train Zapatista community members to document their work as well as abuses from the state. After ten years, each region will have its own video documentation center, and that non-profit will dissolve. The Zapatistas have also partnered with an NGO to help communities create their own education systems. Once this task is accomplished, that non-profit must leave the autonomous territory. Other revolutionary movements in Central America started NGOs as fronts which provided a public face for the movement and helped advocate for the human rights of its members. However, in all these cases, the membership base does not come from the non-profit. Thus if a NGO loses funding, it does not impact the movement. Nowhere do those non-profits have files of the movement’s membership; it is completely separate from the non-profits. NGO “professionals” bring tools and skills but have no decision making power at all. In many cases (when the NGO is not a front for the political organization), the non-profit workers, who work very closely with these movements, are not considered members of these movements, they are supporters or allies and see themselves as such.

In the current US context, it’s clear we still have a lot of work to do. I would argue that we need to do more organizing and base-building that works outside the non-profit system. Non-profits then could participate in structured relationships of accountability created by the movement and supports the work without co-opting the movement itself. The work that is now publicly visible in Latin America did not happen over night, but was the result of much trial and error and invisible work to lay the base for a powerful movement. If we want to build powerful movements here, we need a spectrum of approaches and to figure out ways to organize without paid staff and without funding. We need to take risks, and then compare strategies with each other. In addition, we need to think strategically of how to involve people of all sectors in the movement - be they unwaged mothers, non-profit workers, teachers, or grocery store workers. We need to answer the question of how to strategically involve not just traditional political sectors to effect mass social change.

The Cop in the Heart- Internalized Patriarchy

These reflections, lessons, and revolutionary guiding principles are particularly helpful for those of us who are organizing at the crossroads of oppression (on the basis of class, gender, race, sexuality and so on), and trying to mobilize this intersectionality. Prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union, there were many national revolutionary struggles that did achieve real change in their respective countries. However, these movements generally focused only on overthrowing capitalism and did not address the intersections of capitalism with patriarchy, racism, and other forms of oppression. Class was identified in the classic Marxist analysis as the “primary” contradiction. By the early 1970s, organizers began critiquing this model for marginalizing women, indigenous peoples, and other people from “ethnic minorities.” In addition, these older models conceptualized the struggle as happening only at the level of institutional change, either armed or traditional electoral political struggles. Struggle was not something one could participate in one’s everyday life. Rather, true revolutionaries were supposed to leave their home, go to the mountains to be trained to join armed struggle, or work grueling political election campaigns over months away from home and family. This mode of organizing was based on a macho revolutionary standard of struggle where commitment is measured by how “tough” you are, how much you can sacrifice family and love in order to focus on the revolutionary process. Mostly this resulted in women being left behind to raise children on their own, many times not knowing if their partners had been murdered or if they had chosen new intimate relationships. Some women were also integrated into these struggles, but only if they “dressed like men”, acted in cold-blood, left their children and families for years at a time and followed the order of command and obey.

As economic, military, and ecological devastation continue to make life in our world evermore violent and dehumanized, there is a clear need to step-up our commitment and militancy. But we must be careful not to equate patriarchal, hierarchical militarism with militancy. Some U.S. based organizers, including feminists of color, seem to romanticize this “old school” revolutionary model, equating militaristic talk and dress, top down chains of command, “tight security”, long hours at meetings every night, and personal life sacrifice with being truly revolutionary. This is ironic because many women’s groups and queer folks, and ex-cadres and some comandantes of the revolutionary left in Latin America have spent the last 15 years critiquing the inherent, patriarchal, hierarchical, dehumanizing basis of these models of organizing.

But today it still plays out in strange ways. For example, in 2004, SIIS was part of a city-wide coalition that coordinated well-organized community contingents for a series of marches against the Republican National Convention. This coalition was committed to the important work of keeping our people safe and security was stepped up. But somehow it also manifested as security marshals barking orders at people to get in single file without explanations, as loud and hard commands to the young people holding the banner to “Hold Up the Banner!” whenever they lowered it from being tired. Security persons were not to socially interact with marchers, and talking and smiling were not allowed. When SIIS shared in the debrief session our concerns about what we felt were patriarchal practices and unnecessary levels of hierarchy, others looked at us with blank faces; most of them were other women of color.

This story is not at all meant to disrespect those organizers. Rather it is an opportunity to think about how deeply we have internalized Patriarchal dominance, even as women and queer folks. Our critique did not fully register with some people present at that meeting, in large part because we did not know how to clearly and compassionately articulate it, as we were still just trying to figure it out for the first time. It was only in the next year when a few of us were visiting with the Argentinian autonomous MTD Solano movement that we learned much from listening to their reflections of how important it was to not have “security” people at the roadblocks have any power over others. The political intentionality they put toward not recreating policing relations between people was eye-opening, especially considering the high-risk conditions of their struggles where people in the past had lost their lives. Learning from these practices and comparing them to our relatively small and peaceful RNC protests was an important lesson.

Many powerful voices have spoken of these conflicts and contradictions of the revolutionary Left. One example of this contradiction comes from the 1979 film by Pastor Vega, Retrato de Teresa (Portrait of Teresa), which documents how many women in postrevolutionary Cuba did not end up with easier lives but rather, with a triple work load: the work of earning a living, the work of participating in revolutionary politics/culture, and the work of taking care of children and the home. Similarly, Lorena Pena, better known as Comandante Rebeca from the FPL (Fuerzas Populares de Liberación) in El Salvador, has pointed to her organization’s lack of understanding with regard to the extra burdens carried by the women and mothers who are militants and combatants. She shares her own experience having had to part with her 8 month old child in order to fulfill her responsibilities as a clandestine organizer working in the tugurios (shantytowns): “Separating from a child is like having your arm amputated. I can not explain the sensation even physically that one feels…..I remember that to give myself strength I even read some writings of Lenin aimed at women where he speaks of motherhood in the historical-social sense (14).” Rebeca also critiques her organization’s policies towards women combatants who become pregnant and are demoted regardless of their technical and political skill level. While she recognizes the need for pregnant women to take on a role with less physical strain, she argues that this should not mean being placed in roles of less political value and recognition within the organization. These experiences eventually led Rebeca to help create the movimiento de mujeres (women’s movement) Melida Anaya Montes, which began within the FPL and later became an autonomous organization in order to more powerfully challenge the patriarchal, discriminatory practices and culture of political organizations in El Salvador.

One of the most confrontational and beautiful voices belongs to Pedro Lemebel, a gay communist from Chile. In his poem “Punto de Vista Diferente” (A Different Point of View), Lemebel directly addresses—and critiques—the “revolutionary” Left parties of Latin America with a radical vision of his own.

But don’t talk to me about the proletariatBecause being poor and gay is worse…..What will you do with us “companeros”?Will you tie us up by our braidsDestined for a cuban “sidario” (15)Will you put us on a train to nowhere…Are you afraid of the homosexualization of life?And I’m not talking about sticking it in and pulling it outI’m talking about tenderness “compañero”…I’m not going to change for MarxismThat rejected me so many timesI don’t need to change, I’m more subversive than you.

Still active in the autonomous Chilean left, Lemebel has found a way as a writer and radio/television personality to make his experience and politics accessible to ordinary Chileans, including older working class women like his mother and my grandmother. He speaks of everyday struggles of everyday folks as political, reaching many more people than the official Left parties ever could. Like Lemebel, many activists realize that this hierarchical and male-dominated model of being a revolutionary ultimately fails to address the concrete experiences of oppression in everyday life. Committed to building movements that are sustainable in the long-term, increasingly movements are focused on creating struggle within the context of one’s life. The battleground of the struggle is in how we live, how we survive, and how we sustain our lives. Instead of bringing people to a political world, argues Gerardo Rénique, this model grounds the political in everyday life:

Confronted by the retrenchment of the state from its most basic social duties, many popular movements organize to address such aspects of everyday life as housing, nutrition, childcare, education, and productive work. One thinks here of the communal kitchens in Peru, squatter organizations in Uruguay, cooperatives of unemployed workers in Argentina, landless peasants in Brazil, and the autonomous municipalities and Juntas de Buen Gobierno (Good Government Councils) in the territories in Mexico controlled by the EZLN. Driven by principles of solidarity, self-respect, collective participation, and communal interest, these popular institutions constitute a powerful challenge to the individualism, self-interest, and exclusion that are the core values of neoliberalism (16).

In these new movements much of the political work happens close to home. It’s not that mass demonstrations are no longer considered useful. But there is growing understanding that such tactics, once required on a regular basis to demonstrate your political commitment, are largely if not entirely alien to the reality of most people’s lives, especially poor people struggling just to survive. But when collectively reimagined by movement members, mass demonstrations can take on a new and differently gendered character. For the Zapatistas, as Javier Elorriaga, one of the EZLN’s main public figures explains,

It's necessary to build from below, to be constantly consulting; to be looking for new forms of participation, for those who have time participate and those who don’t have time; the woman who has children and has in addition another job and comes home to feed them; even the mother who can’t attend the assemblies, that she too have the possibility to participate politically. And all of this on the margins of power (17).

In other words: What if, as a tired, overworked, and underpaid or unpaid woman I do not have to add going to this march to my list of things to do? What if, instead, I could integrate my political participation into my daily life? What if there were a “space” I go to build and learn politically with others that is part of how I take care of myself and others? Here again, the Zapatistas’ “caracoles” offer us another visionary model that extends beyond mere protest or demonstration to a long-term and integrative approach to resistance.

It has taken me a long time to truly understand how to apply this theory to my lived experience as a social justice activist. Until recently I was a full-time organizer type, single with no dependents, who received a paycheck from a non-profit for part-time work (while also teaching self-defense part-time). That non-profit is Sista II Sista, an organization I’ve been a part of for ten years. For almost the first four years of its life, SIIS was run as a volunteer collective; this all changed in 2000, when we incorporated as a non-profit with paid staff and foundation funders (18). Ultimately financial crisis, as well as the reflections of paid and unpaid collective members, led us to decide to return to our roots as a volunteer grassroots organization. This difficult transition, in addition to my becoming a first time mother, showed me how challenging yet important it is to participate politically. In my view, living a full, difficult and complicated life, like all the folks we are organizing with, while also being a caretaker for an individual and/or a volunteer for an organization is the political task at hand.

If our commitment to organizing is to build with those who are most marginalized, if we want to prioritize poor and working class women of color in the U S, most of whom are responsible for the care and survival of children and/or other family members, then it is essential that we look for alternative models to movement-building. We must also recognize another major challenge observed from outside the U.S.: the dismantling of “community”, social connections and relationships of solidarity and love. If we are faced with these conditions, it seems crucial that we try forms of organizing that center the daily experiences of those caught in the crossfire of all forms of oppression. From Latin America we can draw examples of the gigantic efforts for daily survival by the oppressed, an effort that involves strengthening the communitarian spaces and ties they are constructing and re-creating every day. It is not enough to center poor and working class women and queer folks of color’s experiences to organize around if the mode of organizing is still very similar to how male dominated labor or U.S. style community organizing operates. In this model only those who have the privilege and/or obligation of being full-time organizers because they are single without dependants, or fathers who do very little parenting, or people who can afford to pay others to do the caretaking of their families can actively participate, let alone lead our movements. Ultimately, political involvement that comes at the expense of our relationships with loved ones and the larger community is not truly libratory (19).

As the material conditions worsen in the US, it is becoming ever more clear that many people’s lives in this country are becoming as precarious as those of the peoples of the Global South, as we have seen with the impact of Hurrican Katrina on the Gulf Coast. Especially during these times, I encourage US activists to keep thinking outside the non-profit box and learn from movements, wherever they may be, both past and present, that have been able to achieve much more working outside this narrow, even compromising structure. While the contexts are not the same, the principles of the movements in Latin America and elsewhere can help inform our organizing work here. Because they come from people who are not living in the “brain of the monster”, the US Empire, they can help us identify the cops in our heads and hearts to release us from the US-centric tunnel vision and expand our dreams of possibility.

AcknowledgementsAs this is the first time that I have written an article alone (not as a collective process) I feel responsible to include some of the names of those with whom I have developed these reflections in practice over the last ten years in New York City. The collectives of Sista II Sista, Pachamama, Community Birthing Project, Sisterfire, Center for Immigrant Families, Regeneración Childcare NYC, Sistas on the Rise, Harm Free Zone, Refugio, INCITE! and Lola’s informal childcare crew have been working hard to embody and support these alternative revolutionary visions. Along with all those amazing companer@s, I have had the incredibly valuable experience of being able to learn, organize, cry and struggle closely with Nicole, Adjoa, and Ije, powerful mothers or caretakers of family. All of these folks along with my closest familia, my mother Ximena, my grandmother Dolores, my mentor Eugenia, as well as Eric and Xue-Li Dolores have lovingly taught me more than I could have learned in ten more years of radical organizing as a single “organizer” with no dependents.

Notes

The term “cop in the head” comes from an acting exercise in Theatre of the Oppressed to identify the dominant social ideology that becomes internalized through a complex series of cultural, political, historical, and economic processes. Theatre of the Oppressed is a methodology from Brazil created by Augusto Boal in the 1970s.

1Compañer@s or compas are warmer terms for the English equivalent, comrades; rather than using the letter a or o to designate a gender, as traditionally required by Spanish grammar, some activists and writers use the @ symbol to make the term both feminine and masculine.

11 In Bolivia, these sectors “were capable of mounting an insurrection without leadership or leaders. …when workers formerly left the organization of their work to employers and the management of society to the state, they had to rely for their struggles on hierarchical and centralized structures, and depended on their leaders – union- and political – to represent them and make decisions. The autonomy of such persons vis-à-vis capital runs in tandem with their autonomy vis-à-vis the state. In fact, the most important problems of their daily lives, from the construction and maintenance of their environment (dwelling, water, sewage, and streets) to essential aspects of education and health, have been taken in hand via an impressive network of basic organizations. In El Alto alone there are, according to different sources, between 400 and 550 neighborhood juntas, one for every 1,000 inhabitants over the age of 10.” Zibechi, "Subterranean Echos," 23.

18 For a fuller history of SIIS’s journey through the non-profit system and beyond, please see “On Our Own Terms: 10 Years of radical community building with Sista II Sista,” which originally appears in Left Turn 18 as well as in The Revolution Will Not Be Funded.

19 One project I am currently involved in was inspired by colectivos de mujeres (women’s collectives) from different Latin American movements, such as the Sandinista struggle in Nicaragua. Prior to the revolution, much work was done through day care centers clandestinely developed by the Sandinistas. No one realized they were revolutionary institutions, providing an opportunity to meet with women and children in their everyday lives for political education, organizing, and mobilizing. We are currently developing a child-care cooperative in Brooklyn, Pachamama, that is attempting to be financially self-sustaining by running through barter and sliding scale. We opened our first childcare cooperative in April 2005 and it has inspired some of the members to break-off and begin a separate similar cooperative, Little Maroons, launched in September 2005. We are also connecting with two other working class women of color groups interested in starting similar projects. In our vision these spaces can become a base for doing grassroots political education and organizing work that fits in with the lives of poor women of color in Brooklyn. Do we see this as a legitimate location from where to organize and participate in movement building? I hope so.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Sorry for my tardiness this week. The sad news is that I'm back from a funeral. The good news is that before that, I was doing childcare and traveling with members of FUREE, ReadNex Poetry Squad, Make the Road by Walking, and Fair Food NYC to join the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) in Chicago to end their succesful "Truth Tour 2007" against McDonald's...Next Stop: BURGER KING!The webmaster for Encuentro NYC and I teamed up to publish 10,000 bi-lingual (Spanish/English) copies of the zapatistas' Sixth Declaration...3,600 of which I delivered to the CIW on Saturday at their "Concert for Fair Food" in Chicago's House of Blues. Seven years after the break-up of Rage Against the Machine, Zach de la Rocha and Tom Morello briefly reunited to continue their solidarity with the CIW and close out the show.

Speaking of Tom Morello and copies of the zapatistas' Sixth Declaration...The revolutionary rock (+hip-hop, punk, reggae, ska, afrobeat, bhangra...) band Outernational is touring with another thousand copies of the aformentioned Declaration right now on a brief stint opening for Ozomatli. It's a brief stint because soon they will be headed to Cali to go into the studio to record their first album with former Rage guitarist, now The Nightwatchman, Tom Morello on production!

Having been friends with their trumpetist, vocalist, dhol and bongo player, Sonny Suchdev, for years now, I waited an unacceptably long time to see them live. I finally caught up with Outernational earlier this month at Manhattan's Knitting Factory where they tore the place up with a packed crowd moshing, stage diving, and -yes- BALCONY DIVING...it was a hot show to say the least. Also hot was that they made room for Left organizations such as Left Turn, the War Resisters' League, and perennial Outernational tourmates, the RCP-USA, to table and distribute their own media. Band members' politics span a spectrum from anarchist to communist and things all around and in between so the decision to bring the zaps' "Sexta" on tour could only complement the revolutionary pan-leftist mix.

What's on the horizon? It's not unlikely that one day soon the zapatistas will get to return the act of listening with the sounds of Outernational blasting over the radio waves of Radio Insurgente...and the next batch of bi-lingual Sextas coming out of NYC will be in English and ARABIC! Why? Well, that's another story, for another time, so stay tuned! And thank you for your patience...in the meantime, check out Outernational on tour...

I am again amazed by the power of networks...While much of the US labor movement continues to flounder, the 3,000 almost entirely immigrant farmworkers that make up the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) have just followed up their victory over the world's largest restaurant company, YUM! Brands (owner of Taco Bell), with another victory over McDonald's...and are now aiming their sites at Burger King.

The CIW has won these historic victories in large part due to its capacity to build a rich web of alliances with students, clergy, politicians, you name it...even the "official" labor movement. They build horizontal and participatory relationships with other forces, recognizing their unique strengths, struggles, desires and creativity. This is not just consistent with a vision for a democratic movement within which the most oppressed are self-empowered, but it is also proving more effective at transforming the world for the better than the pyramidal structures of "Big Labor"...

The Zapatistas, meanwhile, have just launched a World Campaign for the Defense of Autonomous Indigenous and Peasant Land and Territory in Chiapas, Mexico and the World. Inspired by the heightened struggle to defend their territories in Chiapas, the Zapatista-launched campaign has already received letters of support from João Stédile of Brazil's Landless Workers Movement and Rafael Alegría (see his picture above and my translation of his letter below), along with over a thousand signed supporters from throughout Mexico and the World.

Moving forward with the second phase of their participation in the Other Campaign, members of the Zapatistas' Sixth Commission are traveling to set up their presence in the North of Mexico, including the Cucapá Camp. They have also announced that they will soon be releasing the final results of the internal consultation of the Other Campaign to collectively elaborate on the first of its three goals: To create an other way of doing politics. This has been a long process involving the input of over 10,000 individuals, families, groups, collectives, and organizations (not including the Zapatistas).

The Zapatistas' Sixth Commission is now pushing for members of the Other Campaign to begin moving forward on the second goal of the Campaign: To create a national program of struggle. They have also signaled their commitment to continue mobilizing against the repression of their compañer@s, especially in the Yucatán, Oaxaca, and Atenco.

And so the web thickens...

Here is Rafael Alegría's letter sent to the public event in San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas to launch the World Campaign for the Defense of Autonomous Indigenous and Peasant Land and Territory in Chiapas, Mexico and the World:The Global Struggle for Land and Agrarian Reform

Compañeros and Compañeras Zapatistas:

I write you in the name of the Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform of Vía Campesina International. Vía Campesina is an international movement of peasant, indigenous, landless, rural workers, and peasant women and youth organizations. The Global Campaign supports local and national struggles for land and territory, and we fight against privatization and the mercantilization of land and natural resources.

Vía Campesina has a history and a debt with you, compañeros and compañeras of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation. In 2003, when Vía Campesina helped to mount the great mobilization of Cancún, against the train of death, the World Trade Organization, the cards and recorded messages of Comandanta Esther, of Comandante David, and of Subcomandante Marcos, were what motivated and inspired us in that battle in which we obtained a powerful victory, although at the cost of the delivery of the life of a member of the korean peasantry, and martyr of the peasant struggle, Lee Kyung-Hae. Thank you, compañeros and compañeras; in Cancún we felt that our struggle was your struggle. It’s more, the Zapatista struggle is a struggle that inspires all of us peasants throughout the world.

And as peasants, indigenous and landless peoples, we feel that your struggle to defend your lands and recuperated territories is our struggle. We recognize the validity of the agrarian reform made by the Zapatistas in their territories, based in the Agrarian Revolutionary Law of 1993, and we denounce the coordinated ‘counter-reform’ agrarian campaign, in which paramilitary groups, the military, the agrarian magistrate and press, and the government conspire to displace the Zapatista communities of the land and territory recuperated as part of their 1994 uprising.

The Zapatistas made a true agrarian reform in their territories, and now, just as in other countries where agrarian reforms have been made, the powerful seek to reverse these reforms, with the use of paramilitaries and extra-judicial violence, intimidation, fear, and the so-called ‘rule of law’ in which they use the judicial authorities to unmake the reforms, reconcentrate the land in a few hands, and attack the territories of the people. It is the same throughout the world.

Because of this, the Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform of Vía Campesina completely supports, and is a part of, your World Campaign for the Defense of Land and Indigenous Territory and Autonomy. We are in the same struggle, compañeros y compañeras, and together we will win!

TUESDAY, April 10, 7 PM*Movement for Justice in El BarrioVideo Screening: Dialogue with the ZapatistasNew York University Law SchoolVanderbilt Hall, Room 20440 Washington Square South btwn MacDougal and Sullivan

WEDNESDAY, April 11, 7:30 PMBook Party/Forum with John RossZapatistas: Making Another World Possibleat the Brecht Forum -451 West Street btwn Bank & Bethune Streets-more info